Saludos Amigos is a compilation film produced by Walt Disney featuring four animated segments set in South America. The film follows the journey of Donald Duck and his friends as they explore various locations and experience the local culture, music, and dance.
The Three Caballeros follows the adventures of Donald Duck as he explores the wonders of South America. Along the way, he encounters various characters and experiences the vibrant culture and stunning landscapes of the region. From Bahia, Brazil to the snowy landscapes of Antarctica, Donald Duck's journey is filled with music, comedy, and excitement.
Animated documentary promoting timely filing and payment of Federal income taxes, demonstrated by Donald Duck's difficulties with his tax return.
Join Goofy as he explores the wonderful world of baseball, teaching the audience how to play and showcasing the game's excitement and challenges. With his signature humor and charm, Goofy makes learning about baseball a delightful experience.
In this animated short film, Goofy the dog attempts to teach the audience how to play golf. Through comical and exaggerated demonstrations, Goofy showcases the do's and don'ts of the sport, leading to humorous and entertaining situations. The film features Goofy's signature clumsiness and slapstick humor, providing laughs for all ages.
Contrary Condor follows the misadventures of Donald Duck as he encounters an Andean Condor in the mountains of South America. Through a series of comedic events, Donald and the condor become unlikely friends and face various challenges together.
American cowboy Goofy gets taken mysteriously to the Argentine pampas to learn the ways of the native gaucho.
Pedro, a small airplane from Chile, engaging in his very first flight to pick up air mail from Mendoza, with near disastrous results.
Goofy demonstrates a number of crazy vehicles.
The Spirit of '43 is an animated propaganda film that emphasizes the importance of paying taxes, particularly income taxes, to support the war effort during World War II. The film uses the character of Donald Duck to explain the benefits of taxes, such as funding for weapons and supplies for soldiers. It also highlights the importance of savings and patriotism.
Donald is visiting South America, where he is first overcome by altitude sickness. He spends some time in the picturesque market. Then he takes a llama up into the mountains, with exciting results.
Mickey and Pluto make a short stopover on a South American flight. Mickey throws Pluto's ball into the jungle, and he chases it but it looks exactly the same as an armadillo that's rolled up into a ball. This, of course, greatly confuses Pluto for a while. But he eventually makes friends with the armadillo. He chases the critter into a cave right behind his ball, and rips the ball apart thinking it's the armadillo, which makes him very sad until the armadillo shows up again.
Tiger Trouble is a hilarious animated short film from 1945. It follows the comical adventures of Goofy the Dog as he encounters a mischievous tiger in Africa. Full of slapstick humor and anthropomorphic animal antics, the film takes viewers on a surreal journey filled with laughs and tickling feet.
The Building of a Tire is a 1946 Disney animated short film. It was sponsored by the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company.
A brave gaucho lad arms himself with a knife and bolo. He leaves the floor of the pampas and climbs into the mountains looking for prey. In a nest he discovers a flying burro. He captures it and, after several close calls, tames the creature, and he takes it back to town where he enters the burro, with himself on its back, in a horse race. If they win, it means a prize of 1,000 pesos. Can the burro get its act together long enough to fly in a straight line and win? It's the stuff of legends.
World War II propaganda film on the importance of American farming. A morale booster film stressing the abudance of American agricultural output.
The Marquis de Wavrin, a Belgian explorer, spends four years in the Amazon jungle in Ecuador looking for a lost friend who may have fallen victim to headhunters.
In 1925, during the occupation of Haiti, a U.S. Marine Corps sergeant was stationed in charge of the small island of La Gonave. He befriended the natives and was so popular that they named him King Faustin I and installed him as their ruler. He ruled the island for three years, then left and returned to make this documentary.
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